Role of Budgeting in An Organisation
Role of Budgeting in An Organisation
Role of Budgeting in An Organisation
According to Gond, Grubnic, Herzig, and Moon (2012), modern business enterprise is facing
serious challenges due to the dynamics of the contemporary markets. Modern organizations must
be highly integrated if they are to face the dynamics and budgeting not only helps when it comes
to planning but it equally provides an array of measures in the management accounting. Some of
these measures provided by budgeting are helpful, in ensuring that managers are held
accountable for the performance of the firm. Budget is commonly defined as the projected
quantitative plans by the management for the forthcoming period. Others define budget as a set
of projected consequences that result from planned activity (Moynihan, & Lavertu, 2012).
Organizations commonly use budget with an aim of facilitating the communication of specific
information within the firm to ensure that consistent plan on production can be arrived. Most of
the transactions are recorded according to the budgeted numbers. Accounting record is then
expected to contain the differences that exist between actual and budget performance. The
records that appear in the accounting records are expected to be those that can be analyzed and
Budgets are in most case simultaneously for purposes that are always seen to be conflict when it
comes to planning and performance evaluations. There are those suggestions given by economy
theory that separate budgets should be used for conflicting purposes something that is highly
contradicting some of the evidences that organization do not do that (Moynihan, & Lavertu
2012). There are instances where planning task conflicts with performance evaluation task and as
such would significantly affect the way budget negotiation behaves and the outcome. It would be
highly important to find out whether it will be possible to use a single budget for both planning
task and performance evaluation tasks or there is the need to come up with budget that addresses
planning task different and doing the same with performance evaluation (Zheng, & Sakellariou
2013). This paper therefore illustrates the understanding behind interdependencies of the
conflicting purposes of budgeting and further explains why most companies choose to use a
Budgeting
The budgeting process interacts with operations research process through two major ways. The
first way is that the transfer of the information that are accounting based and those that are not to
those that are involved in the operations is achieved through the budget process. The transferred
information helps in formulating production plan of the firm (de Azevedo, de Oliveira, Ensslin,
Jungles, & Ensslin 2012). The second way is that budget helps in reflecting the production plan
and as such being used to serve as a benchmark for subsequent performance evaluation.
Additional information is got from the analysis of the deviations and it can be useful in
formulating the subsequent production plan (Schick 2014). Budgets are commonly prepared at
each level of the organization with the master budget, which is defined as the overall financial
plan for the specified period, reflecting the goals and objectives of a given organization. Within
the master budget, there is the operating and financial budgets with the operating budget showing
planned sales of the company along with its operating expenses whereas financial budgeting
showing financial plans that involve leasing, borrowing and cash management (Arnold, 2014).
When budgeting is properly done, it can competently work as planning and controlling system
for management accountant and the firm as a whole. The object and goals of the or5gansiation
are usually documented in the financial terms and these plans are usually used for the entire year
if they are properly formulated. Performance report of the firm in every month is usually
compared with the actual result in the respective month. To be able to control the firms
operations, management accountant are expected to examine the performance report and
The role that is being played by the effective budgeting in the management of any organization
can be best understood when it is connected to the fundamentals of cost management. The
fundamentals of cost management are to ensure that resources are optimally allocated and that
the organization is positioned such that it can remain profitable (Hope, & Fraser 2013).
Organizations are known to be buying and using flexible resources, which include but not limited
to supplies and materials in a given quantity that is required by the firm. The costs at which
flexible resources are obtained highly depend on the extent at which it is used. Some of these
resources are highly variable in the short run while others such as machinery and skilled
employees do not have variable costs. To be able to ensure that proper allocation for both short
and long run resources are achieved by the firm, a more comprehensive budget is required. Large
and medium organizations benefit from the use of budget as it helps them in accomplishing
various objectives. Some of these objectives include but not limited to planning, resources
Budgeting is always done and made to take the organizational plan, which include goal and
objectives that are then quantified into a more tangible thing. Through the budget, organization is
capable of designing ways through which resources will be acquired or utilized with an aim of
meeting cost management objectives (Stergren & Stensaker 2011). In most cases, budgeting has
been seen as a tool for performance evaluation only but that is not true as budget is also essential
in determining future financial plan by evaluating future expectations as regards to revenue and
costs (Mertens, & Wilson 2012). Management accountant are very much concerned with the
level at which company costs are management. They will always want to come up with a
comprehensive plan on how to obtain required resources for production and how products are to
be produced at much more controlled cost. The only way that can be done is by way of
developing a budget that captures the resources required to meet the company’s objective and
goals along with possible costs. Planning is known to involve making forecast of both financial
and nonfinancial environmental factors that the business may not have the power to control. In
management accounting, the main concern is to ensure that performance objectives are realized
excellent way of implementing sub goals. Budgeting ensures that broad performance objectives
are broken down into a more specific and action oriented targets. Example of a much broader
quarter of this year. This performance objective still remains too broad and can better of broken-
down by management accountant by setting the minimum labor cost to being $2 per unit in the
second quarter. The other way in which a more specific budget can be done with an aim of
coming up with a clear performance of objective plan is setting a minimum of three defective
units that can be produced for every a thousand units for the second quarter.
When a company, say TT is producing two toy cars, a flexible budget is developed for the
machinery department with an aim of predicting expenses of the department within the
accounting as a function of the firm’s activity level. Management accountants then analyses the
prior results that help the department to forecast the relationship that exists between activity and
costs (Bedford 2015). Activity that is fund to be highly correlated with costs is always considered
a cost driver. Management is capable of using a budget to formally state its performance
objective and goals in financial terms within a given period. It is always require that management
to use a common denominator to communicate its plan, which is always in dollars. Marketing
department is expected to come up with plans that are reduced to sales budget and budgets on
equally expected to come up with their plans done in financial terms (Arnold, & Gillenkirch
2015). Coordination of all the activities of an organizational is very instrumental for the
preparation of the master budget. Financial needs, revenue plans, asset requirements, and
planned expenditures are properly integrated by the master budget. All the activities that
managers of the organization are expected to are equally integrated in this budget. With a very
effective coordination, manager’s plans are brought into correspondence with the set firms
objectives.
Budgets are capable of giving managers much more analytical task of always wanting to stick to
the budgetary dictates on a daily basis. This should not be considered unnecessary burden
because in the event that this is not done then the company’s corporate existence may be under a
threat over the increasing costs that can possibly result to loss of jobs and managers being laid
off. Budgeting therefore becomes the most useful tool that a business can use to provide a game
plan. Budgeting offers a game plan that is useful in the long-term operations of the business as
well as daily operations. A properly organized budget by the firm can be helpful to the business
when it comes to meeting its goals and as such become more profitable and survive throughout
the financial times. When developing a budget, planning is one of the very first things that come
meeting the budgets. Most organizations award bonuses as regards to the ability of an employee
to meet the target as defined in the periodic budgets but sometimes it may partly depend on the
manager’s performance. Budgets has been considered to be a very useful way through which
managers are informed on how best they are doing as related to meeting the own previously set
targets. In the operational budget, the data works as a standard for which manager’s or
organizational actual unit’s results are compared. When such as standard misses, senior managers
of the origination would have nothing but the past for which they measure the present results.
There is very little meaningful evaluation of the company or manager’s performance when
In the event that performance evaluation is done to measure operating abilities of a manager and
not their forecasting skills, unforeseeable or uncontrollable effects that are desirable that takes
place during the budget period need to be removed (Frezatti, Aguiar, Guerreiro, & Gouvea,
2011). Some of the uncontrollable environment variables include changes that take place in the
government regulations, shortages, labor unrest or just increase in raw materials cost that are not
expected. In the role of evaluation budget there is the support that budget receive from other
management control elements. As such, budget works as a very crucial standard used in
measurement but falls to the system of reporting in providing data on the exact results that need
to be measured over the standard. The work of budget as a way of carrying out performance
evaluation equally influences the behavior of human. Budget can therefore be seen to be very
effective when it comes to carrying out the work of performance evaluation of the organization
or manager’s performance (Arnold, & Gillenkirch 2015). It would be very crucial that when
drawing the organizational budget, the performance evaluation be taken into account.
Conflicting roles of budgets
Since in most case there is only a single budget that is used to serve multiple objectives, there is
always a danger that a conflict may arise. There is the case where budgets that are not capable of
achieving appropriate performance evaluation are demanded but the same budget is not the right
budget for realizing planning purposes. In the case of planning purposes, budgets are prepared in
advance before the actual budget period by basing it on various forecasted circumstances or
actual performance with budgets that are adjusted to show circumstances that mangers operated
in an actual sense. Most of the companies in practice compare their actual performance with very
original. The adjusted is done to the exact level of the activity of the firm, which means that it is
flexible. However, in the event that circumstances predicted changes due to from the original
When there is a conflict between performance evaluation and planning tasks, the behavior of the
budget negotiations as well as its outcomes will be affected. Management accountants find it
very difficult whether to decide on using a single budget for both planning tasks and evaluation
performance or just prepare different budgets for planning and performance evaluation tasks. A
number of studies have however shown that superior restrictions to a single budget for
performance evaluation and planning tasks leads to an increase in the corporation of the
subordinates even more than when two separate budgets are used. Besides the increased
corporation in the subordinates due to the use of a single budget, there is also the aspect of
saving costs. Coming up with two sets of budget will translate to additional costs unlike when a
single budget is used. The value of increased cooperation and the costs saved offsets the loss that
comes by the flexibility in the restriction. The trade off largely depends on the environment of
the firm, cost of poor planning and low performance. Most of the existing empirical however
shows that less conflict when it comes to negotiation can be attributed to better outcomes of
planning tasks and performance evaluations. The conflict therefore exists when budget is used
for multiple purposes but there is need for further consideration before going for the option of
drawing two budgets for performance evaluation and that of planning tasks.
References
Arnold, MC & Gillenkirch, RM 2015, 'Using negotiated budgets for planning and performance
evaluation: An experimental study', Accounting, Organizations and Society, vol. 43, pp. 1-16.
‘Performance measurement to aid decision making in the budgeting process for apartment-
building construction: case study using MCDA-C,’ Journal of Construction Engineering and
23(3), 205-223.
Hope, J & Fraser, R 2013, Beyond budgeting: how managers can break free from the annual
encourage performance information use?’ Evaluating GPRA and PART, Public Administration
13(2), 49-79.
Stergren, K & Stensaker, I 2011, ‘Management control without budgets: a field study of ‘beyond